With the nation facing the cost of living crisis, Chancellor Rishi Sunak has announced a £ 15bn support package to help troubled households. Some of them are available to everyone, while others depend on your income or benefits to which you are entitled.
With energy bills skyrocketing again in October to an average of £ 2,800 a year, many need support just to cover basic bills. A number of measures have been introduced to try to help with rising costs.
However, according to Leicester Mercury, this support will reach homes in the UK:
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July 6: The national insurance threshold is rising
On 6 July, the threshold for what you can earn before paying for national insurance increases from £ 9,880 to £ 12,570 a year. Some of the lowest incomes will have to pay the tax and will save those who still pay £ 330 a year.
But that’s before two things take into account: First, National Insurance rose in April from 12% to 13.25% thanks to Rishi Sunak. Once you put the tax together and the threshold rises, only people earning less than £ 37,000 will be better off than before April. People who earn £ 30,000 have only £ 53 a year.
Second, if you work but with a universal credit for every pound you earn, the 55 p. of profits are reduced. Models suggest a single parent with £ 16,000 and UC will earn £ 27 a month from the change of threshold, but £ 15 will be reduced in universal credit. This applies throughout the UK.
July: £ 325 for most benefit claimants
More than eight million UK claimants of universal credit, tax credits, pension credit and inherited benefits will receive two payments of £ 325 each. If you enjoy any of these benefits, except for tax credits, your first payment will arrive in your bank account “as of” July.
The exact payment date has not yet been confirmed and will probably depend on when you get universal credit during the month. Claimants must have filed a claim for these benefits by May 25, 2022 at the latest in order to receive the first of the two payments. The £ 650 will be tax-free, will not count towards the benefit limit and will have no impact on existing aid. This applies throughout the UK.
Late summer or early fall: £ 325 for some tax credit claimants
People with tax credits will also receive two payments of £ 325. But theirs will take longer to arrive because they are being managed by HMRC, not DWP. It is understood that they are due in late summer or early fall for the first payment, and for Christmas for the second payment. This applies throughout the UK.
In September: £ 150 for disabled British
£ 150 will be paid into the bank accounts of 6 million people with the following disability benefits:
Subsistence of life due to disability
Payment for personal independence
Attendance bonus
Scottish disability benefits
Payment of the Independence of the Armed Forces
Constant attendance bonus
War pension mobility supplement
People must have applied for or filed a claim (later successfully) for these benefits by May 25th. They will be made directly, will be tax-free, will not count towards the benefit limit and will not have any impact on the existing benefit. Awards. The timing is not right because the DWP has not yet passed the necessary laws to pay the money. This applies throughout the UK.
Autumn: Second payment of £ 325 for benefit claimants
As explained, the single payment of £ 650 for people with benefits comes in two lump sums of £ 325 to bank accounts. There is still no date for the second global amount, but the government says it will come in the fall for people with universal credit, pension credit and most inherited benefits. Again, people with tax credits will have to wait longer; the only guarantee is that they will have it by the end of the year.
October to March: £ 400 off energy bills for all
A £ 200 discount on “buy now, pay later” has been removed from all British electricity bills from 1 October, which was due in five years. Instead, all households will receive a £ 400 discount on their electricity bills from October as a non-refundable grant. You will not receive the £ 400 credited to your account at once.
It will take place over six months from October to March. Therefore, if you pay by direct debit monthly, you can get a £ 66.67 discount per month. It’s a direct discount on your bills, not cash you can spend.
This means that you will probably find that your monthly bills are even higher than at the same time last year. Customers with prepaid counters will have the money applied to their meter or through a voucher. The mechanism for each company is not yet confirmed. This applies to the whole of Britain but not to Northern Ireland, where the administration has been told to draw up its own scheme.
From November to December: Payment of £ 300 for most pensioners
A single £ 300 “cost of living for the pensioner” payment will go to the homes of pensioners who receive the winter fuel payment in November or December. These payments, worth £ 2.5 billion, will be paid along with the winter fuel payment, which is worth between £ 100 and £ 300 for pensioners.
For most retirement homes, it will be paid by direct debit. People are eligible if they are 66 or older before September 19, although some pensioners do not qualify for winter fuel payments. This applies throughout the UK.
April 2023: Increase in benefits and pensions
Although benefits and pensions are not being steadily increased now – which many have asked for – there will be a big increase next year. The rise in April 2022 was a tiny 3.1%, below inflation, because it was based on the CPI figure for September 2021. But in April 2023 the rise could be a 10% above inflation.
Rishi Sunak said he would adhere to the plan, which is subject to review by the Secretary of Labor and Pensions. He said: “According to current forecasts, it is likely to be significantly higher than the inflation rate forecast for next year.”
Sunak also said the triple blockade will return to the state pension, making sure it increases by inflation, wages or 2.5%, whichever is higher. This means that pensions are also likely to rise by around 10%. This is not a surprise, but it is a big compromise after the Conservatives broke their promise of a manifesto on the triple block last time. This applies throughout the UK.
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